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Nov 24, 2012
11/12
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pain serves a very important function for us to survive, it teaches us what to avoid and lets us know when to seek medical help. at the same time, though it can create tremendous suffering. st. augustine once said the greatest evil is physical pain, 100 million americans live with it every day would yo would wouo doubt agree, pain knows no boundaries, regardless of age and race, beyond the physical symptoms the experience of chronic pain often leads to feelings of isolation and hopelessness. >> laura klein had been living with pain since a knee injury in 2008 and joins me this evening to speak about her experiences and incredible group of scientists are also here to discuss how we perceive and process pain, david bar stiewk of children's hospital and david julius of the university of california, san francisco, allan basbaum, also of the university of california san francisco, robert dworkin of the university of rochester and once again my cohost dr. eric kandel a nobel laureate, and a howard hughes medical investigator. >> our subject is pain. hrchl is really one of the great unmet me
pain serves a very important function for us to survive, it teaches us what to avoid and lets us know when to seek medical help. at the same time, though it can create tremendous suffering. st. augustine once said the greatest evil is physical pain, 100 million americans live with it every day would yo would wouo doubt agree, pain knows no boundaries, regardless of age and race, beyond the physical symptoms the experience of chronic pain often leads to feelings of isolation and hopelessness....
WHUT (Howard University Television)
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Nov 7, 2012
11/12
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it is waiting for us! >> tonight, a special edition of charlie rose. >> rose: a politician thinks of the next election, a statesman of the next generation so says james free man clarke. while all the world focuses on the election results, e we want to raise this question: where is america 2012, 236 years after its birth, and where is it going? the challenge for the next administration are both immediate and deep. no great country has sustained its position without a strong economic foundation. the new president and new congress must deal with the fiscal cliff, partisan gridlock has prevented us from making the hard decisions about where we need to spend and where we need to cut and how we bridge a growing economic inequality. while we remain the richest country in the world, the global economic order is rebalancing. the application of american power is changing as we have seen in the response to the arab spring. old alliances need redefining. the pivot to the east demands understanding between china and th
it is waiting for us! >> tonight, a special edition of charlie rose. >> rose: a politician thinks of the next election, a statesman of the next generation so says james free man clarke. while all the world focuses on the election results, e we want to raise this question: where is america 2012, 236 years after its birth, and where is it going? the challenge for the next administration are both immediate and deep. no great country has sustained its position without a strong economic...
WHUT (Howard University Television)
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Nov 9, 2012
11/12
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he's a columnist for the "new york times" and coauthor of that used to be us, how america fell beyond the world we invented and how we can come back. david bureaucrats the author of social love and achievement. joining me is tom brokaw, special correspondent for nbc news and author of the times of our lives, a conversation about america. and jon meacham executive editor of random house and author of the fourth coming book, thomas jefferson the art of power. finally amy gutmann president of the university of pennsylvania and chair of the bioethics and quo author of the spirit of promise why campaigning under mines it. i am pleased to have each here for this information. what is it that this new president has to understand about america at this moment? >> well, i think that this new president is going to have to govern, and governing in a polarized society which we have and a society which has tremendous problem, budgetary economic, immigration, educational. the list goes on. governing is going to mean bipartisan deals. and so mario cuomo may have said that you campaign in poetry but yo
he's a columnist for the "new york times" and coauthor of that used to be us, how america fell beyond the world we invented and how we can come back. david bureaucrats the author of social love and achievement. joining me is tom brokaw, special correspondent for nbc news and author of the times of our lives, a conversation about america. and jon meacham executive editor of random house and author of the fourth coming book, thomas jefferson the art of power. finally amy gutmann...
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Nov 15, 2012
11/12
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i used to wait for the time when-- for the time of prayer i used to wait and i used to cry. you know, who is god? >> rose: this is where pi begins the journey. he were it is. this is our first scene. ♪ ♪ >> my name is pi. i have been in a shipwreck. i am on a lifeboat alone with a tiger. please send help. >> rose: what's happening in that scene? >> well, it's just like-- it's very hard to fin to define god. it is very hard to define what tiger is to pi. there are the obstacles of the beast. there's, you know, pi, the inner beast, the crouching tiger, so to speak, in him. so in the spiritual moment, in the hopelessness, his looking at his opponent, but at the same time, himself, the fearful tiger and also the truth of his own self, and this is the moment before he revealed himself to god, not religious god, but god in the abstract sense. as you can see, the water is like mirror. it's very reflective. it's a very introspective moment but in in the vast of the ocean. >> rose: i want to look at this clip as well. this is where a school of flying fish above pi and richard par
i used to wait for the time when-- for the time of prayer i used to wait and i used to cry. you know, who is god? >> rose: this is where pi begins the journey. he were it is. this is our first scene. ♪ ♪ >> my name is pi. i have been in a shipwreck. i am on a lifeboat alone with a tiger. please send help. >> rose: what's happening in that scene? >> well, it's just like-- it's very hard to fin to define god. it is very hard to define what tiger is to pi. there are the...
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Nov 15, 2012
11/12
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i used to wait for the time when-- for the time of prayer i used to wait and i used to cry. you know, who is god? >> rose: this is where pi begins the journey. he were it is. this is our first scene. ♪ ♪ >> my name is pi. i have been in a shipwreck. i am on a lifeboat alone with a tiger. please send help. >> rose: what's happening in that scene? >> well, it's just like-- it's very hard to fin to define god. it is very hard to define what tiger is to pi. there are the obstacles of the beast. there's, you know, pi, the inner beast, t crouching tiger, so to speak, in him. so in the spiritual moment, in the hopelessness, his looking at his opponent, but at the same time, himself, the fearful tiger and also the truth of his own self, and this is the moment before he revealed himself to god, not religious god, but god in the abstract sense. as you can see, the water is likemirr. it's very reflective. it's a very introspective moment but in in the vast of the ocean. >> rose: i want to look at this clip as well. this is where a school of flying fish above pi and richard parker.
i used to wait for the time when-- for the time of prayer i used to wait and i used to cry. you know, who is god? >> rose: this is where pi begins the journey. he were it is. this is our first scene. ♪ ♪ >> my name is pi. i have been in a shipwreck. i am on a lifeboat alone with a tiger. please send help. >> rose: what's happening in that scene? >> well, it's just like-- it's very hard to fin to define god. it is very hard to define what tiger is to pi. there are the...
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Nov 22, 2012
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for us it's the horizon that matters. the vertical depth is important but what matters is any phone in the world runs facebook. and we work hard at that. we are partnered with enormous number of people around the world and it's been integrated into nine million web sites and mobile apps. we want to be integrated everywhere and that's super important for people to be able to connect to each other. >> looking at the industry as a whole and what's happened in i.p.o., you had an i.p.o., didn't you? >> did we? >> rose: we'll come to that in a moment. do you worry about any kind of what's going on here in terms of value and the way the market looks at what's happening? i'm thinking of groupon and other things. >> i'll probably dodge all the companies? >> why because you invested in them or -- >> people will get mad at me. and then i have to eat lunch by myself. (laughter) so -- >> because of you i may not have the that situation ever again. >> so we're in an era tech stocks haven't traded this low relative to industrial company
for us it's the horizon that matters. the vertical depth is important but what matters is any phone in the world runs facebook. and we work hard at that. we are partnered with enormous number of people around the world and it's been integrated into nine million web sites and mobile apps. we want to be integrated everywhere and that's super important for people to be able to connect to each other. >> looking at the industry as a whole and what's happened in i.p.o., you had an i.p.o.,...
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Nov 21, 2012
11/12
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>> the tone was very scary. >> i felt like they might take us to the back of the street and kill us. >> never go home. >> i told my son to go to the park that night, i feel guilty. >> i don't know what you are talking about and got angry, you know you did it. >> for over 24 hours, that is amounts to pressure. >> these young men were guilty, it was almost unquestioned. >> the police controlled the story. they created the story. they seized on the fears of the people. the wilding, the characterization of the black man. >> this is no dna match whatsoever to any of these boys. >> i was going nuts. >> no blood on the kids, nobody could identify them. but if they confessed they confessed and that was that. >> a lot of people didn't do their jobs, reporters, prosecutors, defense lawyer. >> we convicted them and we walked away from our crime. >> the ultimate siren that says none of us are safe. >> rose: joining me now are two of the film makers sarah burns and her father, my friend ken burns, also joining us is raymond i santana one of the central park 5 i am pleased to have all of them here
>> the tone was very scary. >> i felt like they might take us to the back of the street and kill us. >> never go home. >> i told my son to go to the park that night, i feel guilty. >> i don't know what you are talking about and got angry, you know you did it. >> for over 24 hours, that is amounts to pressure. >> these young men were guilty, it was almost unquestioned. >> the police controlled the story. they created the story. they seized on the...
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Nov 14, 2012
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all of us had access to general petraeus over the years when he wants us around and tell us something. but this was different. he really allowed her to go everywhere with him. he talked to her all the time. i've talked to many aides, they were concerned about it in afghanistan. they were concerned how it looked, the optics of having this woman all the time. they described her as gushy and inapoprie tkingbout his thoughts. you've seen her on several programs over the last week. and things she was saying about him. that made them uncomfortable. >> well like martha, i've known him for about a decade, covered him in these war jones. he's a disciplined man, a man with incredible force of will. as much as we talk about his counterinsurgency doctrine, when i think about what happened in iraq, it was really david trae' will pow inhat battle space in the way he changed people's expectations what was possible, what was striking. so to see a man of that intensity get involved with another very intense person paula broadwell, i'm surprised by the lack of discipline. you can see those two as kind
all of us had access to general petraeus over the years when he wants us around and tell us something. but this was different. he really allowed her to go everywhere with him. he talked to her all the time. i've talked to many aides, they were concerned about it in afghanistan. they were concerned how it looked, the optics of having this woman all the time. they described her as gushy and inapoprie tkingbout his thoughts. you've seen her on several programs over the last week. and things she...
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Nov 13, 2012
11/12
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. >> have hemingway call us and apologize to us, too. >> i'm getting fit for nicky. >> patrick, she left, she's gone. >> doc, i have one instinct. i come home from work, i see my wife in the shower, i pull the car pain back -- so, yeah, i snapped. >> hey, tiffany, it's pat, you look nice. >> thank you. >> look, i think you're pretty but i'm not looking. >> neither am i. >> that's confusing, he's dead. >> wait, what's happening? 6- >> what's this i hear about you getting out of the loony bin? >> i thought you said you had it together! you were solid. >> i am solid! i was solid at the game. >> hey! >> what the hell? >> i just wanted to be friends. >> how did you lose your job >> by having sex with everybody in the office. >> serve in >> i was very depressed. >> we don't have to talk about it. how many were there? >> don't let tiffany get you in trouble. >> she's my friend. why would you say that? >> there's this dance thing. i can only do it if i have a partner. >> i'm not going to dance with you. >> is this the girl you wrote about? >> you wrote about me? >> she's my friend with an "f." >
. >> have hemingway call us and apologize to us, too. >> i'm getting fit for nicky. >> patrick, she left, she's gone. >> doc, i have one instinct. i come home from work, i see my wife in the shower, i pull the car pain back -- so, yeah, i snapped. >> hey, tiffany, it's pat, you look nice. >> thank you. >> look, i think you're pretty but i'm not looking. >> neither am i. >> that's confusing, he's dead. >> wait, what's happening? 6-...
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Nov 14, 2012
11/12
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all of us had access to general petraeus over the years when he wants us around and tell us something. but this was different. he really allowed her to go everywhere with him. he talked to her all the time. i've talked to many aides, they were concerned about it in afghanistan. they were concerned how it looked, the optics of having this woman all the time. they described her as gushy and inappropriate talking about his thoughts. you've seen her on several programs over the last week. and things she was saying about him. that made them uncomfortable. >> well like martha, i've known him for about a decade, covered him in these war jones. he's a disciplined man, a man with incredible force of will. as much as we talk about his counterinsurgency doctrine, when i think about what happened in iraq, it was really david petraeus' will power in that battle space in the way he changed people's expectations what was possible, what was striking. so to see a man of that intensity get involved with another very intense person paula broadwell, i'm surprised by the lack of discipline. you can see th
all of us had access to general petraeus over the years when he wants us around and tell us something. but this was different. he really allowed her to go everywhere with him. he talked to her all the time. i've talked to many aides, they were concerned about it in afghanistan. they were concerned how it looked, the optics of having this woman all the time. they described her as gushy and inappropriate talking about his thoughts. you've seen her on several programs over the last week. and...
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Nov 5, 2012
11/12
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stay with us. we turn now to the other big story that all of us are concerned about, it is the election of the next president of the united states. this is the final weekend for the candidates to make their final arguments, their closing arguments. we will understand more on tuesday night when the voters go to the polls on tuesday. it is a very close race. both sides think they're winning. we turn to john dickerson the cbs news political director for an analysis as we approach the election. welcome. >> we have about five or ten minutes here. give me a snapshot of where this election is as we go into this weekend and the candidates will be making their closing arguments. >> that's right. they're both making their closing arguments. they are all going to the same states. those eight battleground states. ohio is still the granddaddy of them all. governor romney is going there the most of all the battleground states, the same with the president. right now would you have to say that the president has th
stay with us. we turn now to the other big story that all of us are concerned about, it is the election of the next president of the united states. this is the final weekend for the candidates to make their final arguments, their closing arguments. we will understand more on tuesday night when the voters go to the polls on tuesday. it is a very close race. both sides think they're winning. we turn to john dickerson the cbs news political director for an analysis as we approach the election....
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Nov 3, 2012
11/12
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let us know what you think and why. visit pbs.org/ need to know. >> just a quick personal note before we go. in addition to everything we've talked about tonight, and the pressing issues facing the nation, there are lots of smaller but equally important reasons to go to the polls on tuesday beyond the presidential election. whether they are local ballot initiatives, bond measures, state referendums, it doesn't matter if you're in a battleground state, it's your opportunity to express yourself in decisions that are often decided by a handful of votes. so please go vote. i'm hari sreenivasen. thanks for watching "election 2012 what's at stake."
let us know what you think and why. visit pbs.org/ need to know. >> just a quick personal note before we go. in addition to everything we've talked about tonight, and the pressing issues facing the nation, there are lots of smaller but equally important reasons to go to the polls on tuesday beyond the presidential election. whether they are local ballot initiatives, bond measures, state referendums, it doesn't matter if you're in a battleground state, it's your opportunity to express...
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Nov 19, 2012
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stay with us. keira knightley is here after a broke outs-- breakout performance in bebd it like bechham she found her voice in films like pride and prejudice and a tonlt. her latest role from leo tolstoy, she plays the lead in joe wright and the adaptation of the the classic anna karenina. richard corelis of "time" magazine has written of her, a nervey performance, acutely attune to the changes, a creature must endure in her first leap into mad passion. she makes anna karenina an operatic romance worth singing about. i'm pleased to have her back at this table. welcome. >> thank you. >> rose: boy. so there's some of to talk about with you. so much to look forward to. here is the cover of vogue. >> yeah. >> rose: love story, keira knightley, the man in her life and the role of a lifetime. i assume the role of a lifetime is this role. >> must be, yeah. i think so i think that's quite safe to say. >> rose: did it turn out to be that way for you? >> well, i mean not knowing what is going to happen in th
stay with us. keira knightley is here after a broke outs-- breakout performance in bebd it like bechham she found her voice in films like pride and prejudice and a tonlt. her latest role from leo tolstoy, she plays the lead in joe wright and the adaptation of the the classic anna karenina. richard corelis of "time" magazine has written of her, a nervey performance, acutely attune to the changes, a creature must endure in her first leap into mad passion. she makes anna karenina an...
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Nov 28, 2012
11/12
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you don't need us to say. if the american people want to allow suicide they can do what washington did. i think washington has done. simply allow it by statute. >> rose: that is the system that you like to see? >> the point is not that i like to see it. it is a system we thought we had. but to come back to your question about whether the confirmation process is going to change, i think it took the american people 30 years to figure out what was going on, all of this evolving constitution stuff begins with the warren court, in force with the warren court. and once the american people figured out what was going on, the court was revising the constitution term by term, well my goodness, the old criteria for selecting justices and even lower court judges, they are not -- he is nice, he is a good lawyer but nice if he can read a text but the most important question will this person write the new constitution that i like? that is what the borg hearing was all about and that's what all the hearings since have been ab
you don't need us to say. if the american people want to allow suicide they can do what washington did. i think washington has done. simply allow it by statute. >> rose: that is the system that you like to see? >> the point is not that i like to see it. it is a system we thought we had. but to come back to your question about whether the confirmation process is going to change, i think it took the american people 30 years to figure out what was going on, all of this evolving...
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Nov 1, 2012
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again, it's how the regulators use the tools. whether they will have the courage to use the tools. that's a separate question. but if it was left up to my former agency i think they absolutely would use them. >> rose: you just went to boston-- or to massachusetts to endorse elizabeth warren. >> yes. >> rose: who at one time thought might head up the consumer protection agency. that was not to be. >> right. >> rose: she wasn't even nominated by the president. >> right, right. >> rose: why did you endorse her? not that you shouldn't have, but why did you? >> she's my friend and i worked with her a lot. well, she was actually an advisory committee i set up at the f.d.i.c., to advicous consumer issues and how to make the banking system more accessible to lower income people. she was a tremendous help in that. and i worked with her when she became the chairman of the congressional oversight panel, nancy pelosi appointment, and we agreed a lot on some of the misuse of tarp funds. and when she became the special adviser to the consumer bureau, i was very supportive of the consumer bureau
again, it's how the regulators use the tools. whether they will have the courage to use the tools. that's a separate question. but if it was left up to my former agency i think they absolutely would use them. >> rose: you just went to boston-- or to massachusetts to endorse elizabeth warren. >> yes. >> rose: who at one time thought might head up the consumer protection agency. that was not to be. >> right. >> rose: she wasn't even nominated by the president....
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Nov 23, 2012
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. >> this gives us neither knowledge nor truth, men have wasted away in front of it. even gone mad. that is why tomorrow it will be moved to a new home. and i must ask you, not to go looking for it again. it the does not do to dwell on dreams, harry. and forget to live. >> rose: so you set out to write this new book. you knew it was going to be about adults. >> uh-huh uh. >> rose: what else did you know after you had that inspiration on that plane? >> well, the germ of the idea was a council of action, a local council election that would be subverted by teenagers. which was a device to expose certain secrets, yes, that was the basic idea and i was excited by that idea because, it was going to give me an opportunity to explore a lot of things that are important to me, and things that obsessed me frankly. >> rose: and. >> well, for example, i just talked about the fact that i was in a very prekaren situation for a few, precarious situation and probably as poor as you could be without being homeless in uk, friends and family helped they but, you know, it was tough, and. >> rose:. >> ro
. >> this gives us neither knowledge nor truth, men have wasted away in front of it. even gone mad. that is why tomorrow it will be moved to a new home. and i must ask you, not to go looking for it again. it the does not do to dwell on dreams, harry. and forget to live. >> rose: so you set out to write this new book. you knew it was going to be about adults. >> uh-huh uh. >> rose: what else did you know after you had that inspiration on that plane? >> well, the...
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Nov 16, 2012
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thank you for joining us. see you next time. >> rose: funding for charlie rose has been provided by the c captioning sponsored by rose communications captioned by media access group at wgbh access.wgbh.org oca-cola company, supporting this program since few thousand 2. and american express. additional funding provided by these funders. and by bloomberg, a provider of multimedia news and information services worldwide. be more, pbs. >> this is nbr.
thank you for joining us. see you next time. >> rose: funding for charlie rose has been provided by the c captioning sponsored by rose communications captioned by media access group at wgbh access.wgbh.org oca-cola company, supporting this program since few thousand 2. and american express. additional funding provided by these funders. and by bloomberg, a provider of multimedia news and information services worldwide. be more, pbs. >> this is nbr.
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Nov 2, 2012
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vanderlyn used to blackmail him. she said, however, she would exchange them for the plans of the kestrel. >> oh, tom. >> if he were seen to hand over those plans to mrs. vanderlyn, he would be ruined, anyway. so, it had to look as if somebody had stolen them. and although he tried to persuade us that he saw this mysterious figure on the terrace, it was monsieur mayfield himself who stole those plans. it was the safest way. and they were securely in his pocket throughout the whole farce of mrs. vanderlyn's arrest. >> and you keep saying everything's going to be all right. >> it will, darling. you-- >> let me pass! let me pass! >> please, sir george-- >> i've had enough of this, mayfield! what's going on? i've been kept totally in the dark! >> no, no, no, no, sir george. the germans have got the missing papers. >> what? >> and you, monsieur carlisle, i imagine you know this, as well as anyone. >> [sigh] the german high command now has plans of our new fighter, on which they'll have to wait six months of concentrated ef
vanderlyn used to blackmail him. she said, however, she would exchange them for the plans of the kestrel. >> oh, tom. >> if he were seen to hand over those plans to mrs. vanderlyn, he would be ruined, anyway. so, it had to look as if somebody had stolen them. and although he tried to persuade us that he saw this mysterious figure on the terrace, it was monsieur mayfield himself who stole those plans. it was the safest way. and they were securely in his pocket throughout the whole...
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Nov 2, 2012
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sinai, cornell, lenox hill andmont use viewer. when i walked in one of the people i saw was a little baby 29 weeks old, premie. i wasn't sure if it was a boy or girl. i went over and asked the mother is it boy or girl. it's 29 weeks. it's a boy. the nurse, they didn't left the mothers carry the babies but the nurse was gently cuddling it. it made an impression because my son noah was born at 29 weeks. i was thinking my gosh i remember i was scared enough when he was in the intensive care at columbia. that's hard enough, there's a hurricane and if that isn't enough the power's out we need to move your baby to another hospital. we followed up, we were looking for what happened to these patients. 325 patients were evacuated and our producers of all the joints in the world ended up finding this baby and we were able to do a piece with the baby. >> rose: the next piece is from cbs this morning in which you see some of the newborn babies being evacuated. roll tape. >> doctors , nurses and hospital specified are evacuating patients from
sinai, cornell, lenox hill andmont use viewer. when i walked in one of the people i saw was a little baby 29 weeks old, premie. i wasn't sure if it was a boy or girl. i went over and asked the mother is it boy or girl. it's 29 weeks. it's a boy. the nurse, they didn't left the mothers carry the babies but the nurse was gently cuddling it. it made an impression because my son noah was born at 29 weeks. i was thinking my gosh i remember i was scared enough when he was in the intensive care at...
WHUT (Howard University Television)
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Nov 8, 2012
11/12
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even so i would recommend somehow he not use tell prompters. f.d.r. knew when he was giving his radio chats that he needed people in the room so he could pretend he was talking to people. >> rose: here's the thing lyndon johnson never learned well. he never did. his tell prompter was called mother because he wouldn't go anywhere without mother. >> rose: and he made jokes about it himself but it is, in fact, learn to talk in a way that you are not reading. >> right. >> rose: so f.d.r., what does he learnrom f.d.r. >> the most interesting thing he might learn from f.d.r. is if he does need to pivot somehow to make a better relationship with the business community so he can figure out a way to mobilize the country to be more competitive with global economy, to make sure we've got jobs that are really good jobs going forward. f.d.r. pivoted from dr. new deal to dr. win the war. he stopped his hostility toward the business community but he never let labor go. at the same time. and he gave antitrust regulations, he eased up on those. he gave profits to busi
even so i would recommend somehow he not use tell prompters. f.d.r. knew when he was giving his radio chats that he needed people in the room so he could pretend he was talking to people. >> rose: here's the thing lyndon johnson never learned well. he never did. his tell prompter was called mother because he wouldn't go anywhere without mother. >> rose: and he made jokes about it himself but it is, in fact, learn to talk in a way that you are not reading. >> right. >>...
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Nov 16, 2012
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thank you for joining us. see you next time. >> ros funding for charlie rose h bneero nvieddby the c eptioning sponsored by rose communications captioned by media access group at wgbh access.wgbh.org oca-cola company, supporting this program since few thousand 2. and american express. additional funding provided by these funders. and by bloomberg, a provider ofm foninltimmuiaatews io naninfoatn services worldwide. be more, pbs. [dramatic music] ♪
thank you for joining us. see you next time. >> ros funding for charlie rose h bneero nvieddby the c eptioning sponsored by rose communications captioned by media access group at wgbh access.wgbh.org oca-cola company, supporting this program since few thousand 2. and american express. additional funding provided by these funders. and by bloomberg, a provider ofm foninltimmuiaatews io naninfoatn services worldwide. be more, pbs. [dramatic music] ♪
WHUT (Howard University Television)
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Nov 6, 2012
11/12
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stay with us. before we leave you this evening here is a preview of tomorrow night's program: a look at where america is and where it's going. joining me, tom friedman, david brooks, tom brokaw, john meacham and amy gutman. >> i'm take within amy's comment that we've been campaigning in fiction and i woulextremely sho. it's been small and short. and so i guess the first thing i would do is i'd say you've got to draw a line between what we've been through and what we're about to go through. you have to make a clear statement that the election is past, i'm going to talk in a very different way, i'm going to talk in a much bigger way, i'm going to say we have three big problems, we have the debt problem, we have a growth problem, we have an inequality problem. they cross cut against each other and we're going to face this cliff pretty soon and so i'm going to do -- either what i didn't do or what president obama didn't do in the last four years, i'm going to lay out a plan. here it is, some people in
stay with us. before we leave you this evening here is a preview of tomorrow night's program: a look at where america is and where it's going. joining me, tom friedman, david brooks, tom brokaw, john meacham and amy gutman. >> i'm take within amy's comment that we've been campaigning in fiction and i woulextremely sho. it's been small and short. and so i guess the first thing i would do is i'd say you've got to draw a line between what we've been through and what we're about to go...
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Nov 6, 2012
11/12
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stay with us. before we leave you this evening here is a preview of tomorrow night's program: a look at where america is and where it's going. joining me, tom friedman, david brooks, tom brokaw, john meacham and amy gutman. >> i'm take within amy's comment that we've been campaigning in fiction and i would say extremely short fiction. it's been small and short. and so i guess the first thing i would do is i'd say you've got to draw a line between what we've been through and what we're about to go through. you have to make a clear statement that the election is past, i'm going to talk in a very different way, i'm going to talk in a much bigger way, i'm going to say we have three big problems, we have the debt problem, we have a growth problem, we have an inequality problem. they cross cut against each other and we're going to face this cliff pretty soon and so i'm going to do -- either what i didn't do or what president obama didn't do in the last four years, i'm going to lay out a plan. here it is,
stay with us. before we leave you this evening here is a preview of tomorrow night's program: a look at where america is and where it's going. joining me, tom friedman, david brooks, tom brokaw, john meacham and amy gutman. >> i'm take within amy's comment that we've been campaigning in fiction and i would say extremely short fiction. it's been small and short. and so i guess the first thing i would do is i'd say you've got to draw a line between what we've been through and what we're...
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Nov 12, 2012
11/12
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all of us found it pretty early, didn't we? >> relatively. that reminded me of... >> rose: before you went to college. >> murrow's journey, out of the lumber fields to washington state university, his teacher there, he was in a play and she recognized something. and from that moment on, and he attributes his career and his success to that woman who discovered a young sort of strapping, inept, relatively shy man who loved to tell stories. >> rose: yeah. >> and she formed him. i mean, it's what you do. you bring people around this table. how many people sat around this table? >> rose: for 22 years. >> for 22 years, exploring ideas. and i means, that's a real gift. >> rose: i tell you a story about this. that marlon brando was a fan of this program, the late marlon brando, and he used to call me up. and he said "you sit there every night and you listen to all these wise people. tell me what are you doing with it." i had no answer it is what you do. and you hope that one show influences another. and if you, because of the composite or the cumulat
all of us found it pretty early, didn't we? >> relatively. that reminded me of... >> rose: before you went to college. >> murrow's journey, out of the lumber fields to washington state university, his teacher there, he was in a play and she recognized something. and from that moment on, and he attributes his career and his success to that woman who discovered a young sort of strapping, inept, relatively shy man who loved to tell stories. >> rose: yeah. >> and she...
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Nov 10, 2012
11/12
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all of us found it pretty early, didn't we? >> relatively. that reminded me of-- . >> rose: before you went to college. >> murrow's journey, out of the lumber fields to washington state university, his teacher there, he was in a play and she recognized something. and from that moment on, and he attributes his career and his success to that woman without discovered a young sort of strapping, inept relatively shy man who loved to tell stories. >> rose: yeah. >> and she formed him. i mean it's what you do. you bring people around this table, how many people sat around this table. >> rose: for 22 years. >> for 22 years, exploring ideas. and i means that's a real gift. >> rose: i tell you a story about this. that marlon brando was a fan of this program, the late marlon brando and he used to call me up. and he said you sit there every night and you listen to all that all these wise people. tell me what are you doing with it. i will no answer it is what you do. and you hope that one show influences another. and if you, because of the composite or th
all of us found it pretty early, didn't we? >> relatively. that reminded me of-- . >> rose: before you went to college. >> murrow's journey, out of the lumber fields to washington state university, his teacher there, he was in a play and she recognized something. and from that moment on, and he attributes his career and his success to that woman without discovered a young sort of strapping, inept relatively shy man who loved to tell stories. >> rose: yeah. >> and...
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Nov 20, 2012
11/12
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stay with us. >> rose: julian sands is here. the british actor is famous for his roles in "e kilng fields" "a room with a view" and the television series "24." he's performing a one-man show called "harold pinter" it's directed by john malkovich and playing at the irish repertoire theater. >> you're finally turning. one for you, one for me. >> every morning i wake up and go, oh, my god. i get to present a celebration of harold pinter. and it fills with me with joy and anticipation. it is r and unplugged. it oozes the spirit of theater. >> i founded the theater with my partner charlotte miller. i'd say everything is irish about the irish repertoire theater. everything perhaps but maybe shamrocks and shell laylys. >> you worked very closely together. has it been a cloudless friendship? >> oh, yes, there's never a harsh word. the broken bones, the beatings, the humiliations i have that endured are a testament to how well we get along. >> but you did break bones here, didn't you? >> i fell down the stairs on the way down to the lowe
stay with us. >> rose: julian sands is here. the british actor is famous for his roles in "e kilng fields" "a room with a view" and the television series "24." he's performing a one-man show called "harold pinter" it's directed by john malkovich and playing at the irish repertoire theater. >> you're finally turning. one for you, one for me. >> every morning i wake up and go, oh, my god. i get to present a celebration of harold pinter....
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Nov 13, 2012
11/12
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. >> have hemingway call us and apologize to us, too. >> i'm getting fit for nicky. >> patrick, she left, she's gone. >> doc, i have one instinct. i come home from work, i see my wife in the shower, i pull the car pnai back -- so, yeah, i snapped. >> hey, tiffany, it's pat, you look nice. >> thank you. >> look, i think you're pretty but i'm not looking. >> neither am i. >> that's confusing, he's dead. >> wait, what's happening? 6- >> what's this i hear about you getting out of the loony bin? >> i thought you said you had it together! you were solid. >> i am solid! i was solid at the game. >> hey! >> what the hell? >> i just wanted to be friends. >> how did you lose your job >> by having sex with everybody in the office. >> serve in >> i was very depressed. >> we don't have to talk about it. how many were there? >> don't let tiffany get you in trouble. >> she's my friend. why would you say that? >> there's this dance thing. i can only do it if i have a partner. >> i'm not going to dance with you. >> is this the girl you wrote about? >> you wrote about me? >> she's my friend with an "f." >
. >> have hemingway call us and apologize to us, too. >> i'm getting fit for nicky. >> patrick, she left, she's gone. >> doc, i have one instinct. i come home from work, i see my wife in the shower, i pull the car pnai back -- so, yeah, i snapped. >> hey, tiffany, it's pat, you look nice. >> thank you. >> look, i think you're pretty but i'm not looking. >> neither am i. >> that's confusing, he's dead. >> wait, what's happening? 6-...
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Nov 22, 2012
11/12
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for us it's the horizon that matters. the vertical depth is important but what matters is any phone in the world runs facebook. and we work hard at that. we are partnered with enormous numb of people around the world and it's been integrated into nine million web sites and mobile apps. we want to be integrated everywhere and that's super important for people to be able to connect to each other. >> looking at the industry as a whole and what's happened in i.p.o., you had an i.p.o., didn't you? >> did we? >> rose: we'll come to that in a moment. do you worry about any kind of what's going on here in terms of value and the way the market looks at what's happening? i'm thinking of groupon and other things. >> i'll probably dodge all the companies? >> why because you invested in them or -- >> people will get mad at me. and then i have to eat lunch by myself. (laughter) so -- >> because of you i may not have the that situation ever again. >> so we're in an era tech stocks haven't traded this low relative to industrial company i
for us it's the horizon that matters. the vertical depth is important but what matters is any phone in the world runs facebook. and we work hard at that. we are partnered with enormous numb of people around the world and it's been integrated into nine million web sites and mobile apps. we want to be integrated everywhere and that's super important for people to be able to connect to each other. >> looking at the industry as a whole and what's happened in i.p.o., you had an i.p.o., didn't...
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Nov 8, 2012
11/12
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even so i would recommend somehow he not use tell prompters. f.d.r. knew when he was giving his radio chats that he needed people in the room so he could pretend he was talking to people. >> rose: here's the thing lyndon johnson never learned well. he never did. his tell prompter was called mother because he wouldn't go anywhere without mother. >> rose: and he made jokes about it himself but it is, in fact, learn to talk in a way that you are not reading. >> right. >> rose: so f.d.r., what does he learn from f.d.r. >> the most interesting thing he might learn from f.d.r. is if he does need to pivot somehow to make a better relationship with the business community so he can figure out a way to mobilize the country to be more competitive with global economy, to make sure we've got jobs that are really good jobs going forward. f.d.r. pivoted from dr. new deal to dr. win the war. he stopped his hostility toward the business community but he never let labor go. at the same time. and he gave antitrust regulations, he eased up on those. he gave profits to bu
even so i would recommend somehow he not use tell prompters. f.d.r. knew when he was giving his radio chats that he needed people in the room so he could pretend he was talking to people. >> rose: here's the thing lyndon johnson never learned well. he never did. his tell prompter was called mother because he wouldn't go anywhere without mother. >> rose: and he made jokes about it himself but it is, in fact, learn to talk in a way that you are not reading. >> right. >>...
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Nov 1, 2012
11/12
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again, it's how the regulators use the tools. whether they will have the courage to use the tools. that's a separate queson. but if it was left up m former agency i think they absolutely would use them. >> rose: you just went to boston-- or to massachusetts to endorse elizabeth warren. >> yes. >> rose: who at one time thought might head up the consumer protection agency. that was not to be. >> right. >> rose: she wasn't even nominated by the president. >> right, right. >> rose: why did you endorse her? not that you shouldn't have, but why did you? >> she's my friend and i worked with her a lot. well, she was actually an advisory committee i set up at the f.d.i.c.,to advicous consumer issues and how to make the banking system more accessible to lower income people. she was a tremendous help in that. and i worked with her when she became the chairman of the congressional oversight panel, nancy pelosi appointment, and we agreed a lot on some of the misuse of tarp funds. and when she became the special adviser to the consumer bureau, i was very supportive of the consumer bureau and tri
again, it's how the regulators use the tools. whether they will have the courage to use the tools. that's a separate queson. but if it was left up m former agency i think they absolutely would use them. >> rose: you just went to boston-- or to massachusetts to endorse elizabeth warren. >> yes. >> rose: who at one time thought might head up the consumer protection agency. that was not to be. >> right. >> rose: she wasn't even nominated by the president. >>...